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Exclusive
120 Minute Detailed Fact-Finding Interview With The Father of Marketing Jay
Conrad Levinson
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Here's your rare look
deep into the mind and personality of Jay Conrad Levinson the Father of
Guerrilla Marketing.
I am pleased to present you with an incredible interview with the Father of
Guerrilla Marketing, Jay Conrad Levinson. Jay Conrad Levinson is the author of
the best-selling marketing book series in history, Guerrilla Marketing, plus 30
other business books. His Guerrilla concepts have influenced marketers so much
that today his books appear in 39 languages, and are required reading for many
MBA programs worldwide.
Jay was the Senior Vice President at J. Walter Thompson and in Europe as
Creative Director at Leo Burnett Advertising. He writes a monthly column for
Entrepreneur Magazine and articles for Incorporated Magazine.
Here is what you’re going to learn in this fascinating interview. You'll learn what Jay Conrad Levinson’s first job was in advertising. You will
learn the secret Jay learned from Hugh Hefner when he worked at Playboy. Hear
how many hours a week Jay worked, and why it has never changed for 32 years.
Wait until you hear what Jay’s father did in his 9:00 to 5:00 job. Learn the
story of how Jay got a 33% response with a one-page, direct mail sales letter.
Hear a little secret of what Jay considers the most important thing he has ever
learned in marketing. Learn Jay’s favorite two books.
Did you know that Jay plays Poker? Find out on what night. Learn how a literary
agent can help you sell millions of books. Hear how much Jay made in royalties
on his very first book. Find out what edition of Jay’s Guerilla Marketing book
is his biggest seller. Learn the key to how to get your book published, printed,
and looking as good as any book in the bookstore for only $10.
Get the 800-number to the best postcard pack people in the United States. Learn
the reason why 90% of all marketing campaigns fail. You'll discover the best day
of the week for making money online. You'll get the links websites for Internet
market research. Hear the truth about the Got Milk commercials? Learn how to
write a 7-sentence Guerilla Marketing plan in five minutes. You'll hear Jay’s
philosophy on money.
Finally, learn Jay’s true Guerrilla I.Q. personality and take the same exact
personality test as you listen to this interview. Have a pen and paper ready.
Put on your seatbelts and let’s learn from the father of Guerrilla Marketing,
Jay Conrad Levinson. Interview was on 02-19-04 and last 112 minutes.
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Jay: I
think the first step is to write a
seven-sentence guerrilla marketing plan.
I give my students five minutes to do
it. The first sentence tells the purpose
of your marketing; what physical thing
do you want people to do—visit a
website, call an 800 number, look for
your product the next time they’re at
the store, answer your email, clip a
coupon. What do you want them to do
physically? The second sentence tells
the prime benefit or competitive
advantage that you thread in order to
accomplish your purpose. You may have
100 benefits. Pick the main one. You may
have 54 benefits. Pick your competitive
advantage that your competition doesn’t
offer. The third sentence of your
marketing plan lists your target
audience or target audiences. The fourth
sentence lists the marketing weapons
that you’ll use. There are 100 different
guerrilla marketing weapons. Sixty-two
of them are free and the fourth sentence
tells the marketing weapons they’ll use.
The fifth sentence tells their niche in
the market place; above board is
positioning—what do they stand for. But
the first word they want to enter
people’s minds is the name of their
company. The sixth sentence tells their
identity, not their image, but identity
that which is their company personality.
The seventh sentence tells their
marketing budget, which should be
expressed as a percentage of projected
gross sales. If you start with that plan
and then commit to that plan, that’s how
the whole thing works. That’s where the
magic comes from.
[Music]
Michael: Hi. This is Michael Senoff with
www.hardtofindseminars.com . I’m
pleased to present you with an
incredible interview with the Father of
Marketing, Jay Conrad Levinson. Jay
Conrad Levinson is the author of the
best selling marketing series in
history, “Guerrilla Marketing,” plus 24
other business books. His guerrilla
concepts have been influencing marketers
so much that today his book appear in 37
languages and are required reading for
many MBA programs worldwide. Jay was a
Senior Vice President at J. Walter
Thompson and in Europe as creative
director at Leo Burnett Advertising. He
writes a monthly column for Entrepreneur
magazine, articles for Incorporated
magazine. Here’s what you’re going to
learn in this fascinating interview.
You’ll learn what Jay Conrad Levinson’s
first job was in advertising. You’ll
learn the secret Jay learned from Hugh
Hefner when he worked at Play Boy. Hear
how many hours a week Jay worked and why
it has never changed for 32 years. Wait
until you hear what Jay’s father did in
his nine to five job. Lean the story of
how Jay got a 33% response with the one
page direct mail sales letter. Hear a
little secret of what Jay considers the
most important thing he has ever learned
in marketing. Learn Jay’s favorite two
books of all time. Did you know that Jay
plays poker? Find out on what night.
Learn how a literary agent can help you
sell millions of books. Hear how much
Jay’s made as a royalty on his very
first book. Find out what edition of
Jay’s Guerrilla Marketing book is his
biggest seller. Learn the key to how to
get your book published, printed, and
looking as good as any book in the
bookstore for only $10.00. You’ll have
the website and the company name in this
recording. You’ll get the 800 number to
the best postcard pack people in the
United States. Learn the reason why 90%
of all marketing campaigns fail
according to Jay. Discover the best day
of the week for making money online and
it’s not on Monday. You’ll get the links
to two websites that will show you the
best Internet research of how people are
behaving online. Hear the truth about
the Got Milk commercials. Are they
successful or are they bombs? Learn how
to write a seven-sentence guerrilla
marketing plan in under five minutes.
You’ll hear Jay’s surprising philosophy
on money. And finally, learn Jay’s true
personality and take the same exact
personality test as you listen to this
interview. Have a pen and paper ready
for your personality test. Put on your
seat belts and let’s learn from the
Father of Marketing, Jay Conrad
Levinson.
Michael: I want you to do one thing. Do
you have a pen and a piece of paper in
front of you?
Jay: I have a piece of paper and now I
have a pen.
Michael: I want you to write down
numbers one through five and under each
number I’m going to give you something
to put by it.
Jay: Okay, I’m ready.
Michael: Number one would be “not very.”
Like not very interested. Number two
would be “just a little.” Number three
would be “somewhat.”
Jay: Got it.
Michael: Number four would be
“ordinarily.” And number five would be
“very.”
Jay: Got it.
Michael: Keep those handy because
throughout our talk, I’m going to give
you a certain amount of words and I’m
going to ask you tell how the word
relates to you based on that scale,
okay.
Jay: I like it, yes.
Michael: But the first thing we’re going
to do is I want to ask you starting from
last night, what time did you go to bed
last night?
Jay: I went to bed last night at 2:30.
Michael: 2:30—what were you doing up
until 2:30? Most people don’t go to bed
at 2:30.
Jay: We had two visitors. My daughter is
visiting from Olympia, Washington and a
business associate came up from San
Diego. And then we had two people join
us from Berkeley. We all went to dinner
together and then we came back to the
house just to talk business and listen
to music. And then when everybody left,
my wife and I watched the American Idols
results and West Wing.
Michael: What’s your favorite TV show
that’s on currently; we’re February 19,
2004? What do you really like on TV?
Jay: I like Survivor.
Michael: This reality show craze has
really hit a chord with American,
wouldn’t you say?
Jay: Well, I liked Real World. That
probably was the first reality show. And
that was my favorite show for a long
time. And now the only one I watch is
Survivor. But, yes, it’s opened a new
genre. You almost knew it would because
it showed people being themselves with
no script.
Michael: How long have you been married?
Jay: Forty-seven years.
Michael: Wow! How many children do you
have?
Jay: One daughter visiting here now from
Olympia, Washington. She has three
children.
Michael: And so, you’re a granddaddy?
Jay: I sure am three times over.
Michael: So, you went to sleep and what
time did you wake up this morning?
Jay: I woke up at 11:00, showered,
cleaned up, read the San Francisco
Chronicle, drank a cup of coffee. Then
the out-of-town visitor who stopped
staying with us came on over.
Michael: Do you read the San Francisco
Chronicle every morning?
Jay: Every morning.
Michael: What else do you read every
day?
Jay: I read a little bit of Time
magazine every day. Those are the only
two things that for sure I read every
day—little bit of Time magazine and the
entire San Francisco Chronicle. If I
have time then I read other books. As an
author, people send me book and they
send me manuscripts. So, I do a lot of
reading that I didn’t plan on.
Michael: Are you a fast reader?
Jay: I would say no. I’d say maybe a
little slower than average.
Michael: Do you watch the news every
day?
Jay: Yes, I watch the news every day.
I’m very settled—either CNN or CBS.
Michael: You mentioned you’re pretty
booked up during the day. You’re doing
teleconferences or training.
Jay: Today, yes. I work a three-day
week. I’ve work only three-day week
since 1971. So, it’s rare for me to be
working on a Thursday. But here I am. I
did a tele-class earlier today. Speaking
to you right now. After this, my weekend
begins.
Michael: So, since 1971 you’ve been
working a three-day week?
Jay: I’ve been working a three-day week
from my home since 1971.
Michael: Have you been working out of
your home since 1971?
Jay: Always worked from my home
Monday’s, Tuesday’s and Wednesday’s. Of
course, occasionally there are
exceptions. As a person writes books,
you’re invited to speak. When I give
talks sometimes they need me to speak on
a Friday or a Saturday. So, on those
days or on those weeks those are
exceptions. But 99% of the time, I work
Monday’s, Tuesday’s and Wednesday’s
only. I stop working about 6:00 on a
Wednesday. My weekends are four-day
weekends.
Michael: Wow, that’s great. So, what do
you do on your time off?
Jay: Skiing or ride rivers or hike or
lurk California or San Francisco or take
advantage of the Redwood Forest or the
tide pools that are so close by.
Michael: That’s wonderful. Now, have you
been in that same home, the one that’s
currently on Ebay for sale?
Jay: Yes, we’ve been in this home since
1933 and now it’s up for sale. We’re
hoping to sell it before April 4 or on
April 4.
Michael: Was that your first home?
Jay: It was the first home we had in
California. We moved here from Chicago
from a home we had. And we moved right
into the house I live in now. We rented
it at first. Then we had a buy it or
lease. So, we bought it. Now, after 33
years, it’s up for sale.
Michael: How do you like Ebay? Do you
use Ebay?
Jay: No, this will be my first
experience ever on Ebay. I’m a total
neophyte. Most people I know, know far
more about Ebay than I do and I’m the
one who’s supposed to know about modern
technology.
Michael: Oh, Jay, Ebay is absolutely
incredible. As far as a research tool
for markets and know what is out there
in the market and what are people
willing to pay, you have thousands and
thousands of niche markets, big markets.
And you can see the proof right with
people’s wallets right on Ebay for free.
Jay: That’s such a good point, Michael.
Michael: It’s really interesting. A lot
of the marketers, maybe the guys who
headed the new Internet generation are
not that computer savvy. How computer
savvy are you? Or when the Internet came
into being, how did you deal with that?
Did you adapt or are you fighting it
still?
Jay: I’m an early adaptor of almost
everything you can name. So, I went
online in 1993. I accepted a word
processor because I’m such a fast
typist, I didn’t like wasting the time
hitting the carriage return so I got a
computer so that I wouldn’t have to hit
the carriage return. And it wasn’t until
about 1995 that I went online—actually
1994 that I went online. I’ve been
online 10 years and had a computer for
longer than that. My first computer I
got in 1983. I’m a fairly early adopter
of technology and I’m pretty much of a
neophyte with technology. And yet, I do
all of the research for my books online
myself. I’m able to find things on the
Internet. I use email like crazy. I’m
very computer illiterate.
Michael: Do you have any of the
high-speed connection?
Jay: I’ve had a high speed connect—I was
the first one in my city to get one.
I’ve written 31 books that I’ve authored
or co-authored. Of those, 17 are
guerrilla marketing books.
Michael: And would you say the guerrilla
marketing series is what you’re best
known for?
Jay: Yes, I know for sure that the
guerrilla marketing books—having sold 16
million copies in 39 languages—that’s
probably what I’m best known for.
Michael: That’s incredible. Well, I want
to talk more about that and I think
we’re going to get that into some of the
questions. I thought about what am I
going to talk to Jay Conrad Levinson
about. I though this is something
fundamental and so elementary when we’re
marketing is to give the marketplace
what they want. So, instead of me trying
to dream up what I think my listeners
and your listeners would want, I
thought, let me send an email out to my
entire list. Let them know I’ll be on
the phone with Jay Conrad Levinson for
90 minutes and that a large part of the
talk will be questions. And I wanted the
questions to come from my website
members and visitors from all over the
world. So, that’s what I did. And I got
a bunch of different questions and a lot
of them are excellent questions. I’d
like to go through some of those.
Jay: That’s wonderful idea Michael. You
are living the idea of interactivity
with the way that marketing is changing
and communication is changing. So, I’m
delighted that you’ve picked that kind
of a format and that your readers have
responded.
Michael: Yes they have, and a lot of
readers we appreciative. Why guess when
you can do the research on the Internet
and see what your market wants. And it’s
almost so simple that it’s overlooked so
often and you just give it to them.
Jay: You’re so right. That’s the key of
succeeding with any kind of thing with
business is find out first what the
people want and then make it for them
because you already know that there are
people there. Some people come up with a
product that nobody wants.
Michael: Well, here’s the first
question. It’s from Peter Elwin from
Sidney, Australia. And he wants to know
who has been your most influential
mentors over the years and what were the
most important lessons you learned from
them and applied?
Jay: Wow, thank you Peter. Those are
good questions that I have an answer
because I’ve thought about it. There
were two mentors I had—pretty much
diametric opposites from each other.
Both were the Presidents of advertising
agencies. I didn’t have to mention, my
father and I had a great relationship. I
don’t consider him my mentor. I did not
have an older brother or anybody who was
a childhood hero who was playing
shortstop for the White Sox. So, my
first idol and mentor was a man named
Howard Gothage who ran an advertising
agency in San Francisco called Weiner
and Gothage. What I learned from him was
how much fun it could be to work in
marketing and advertising. I’d never
realized that it could be that much fun.
And he showed me how much fun there was.
I don’t think he had the best
advertising agency in the city or in the
state or anywhere, but the people who
worked there had a ball. And I realized
how much fun that could be.
Michael: You worked for him?
Jay: Yes.
Michael: Was that one of your first
experiences with an agency?
Jay: That was my first job. I was his
secretary.
Michael: You were his secretary?
Jay: Right, because I typed fast and was
willing to go to shorthand school and
wash windows and get his hot chocolate
every day, I got the job.
Michael: Do you type in shorthand?
Jay: No, I just type regular.
Michael: How many words a minute do you
type? Jay: Maybe 120.
Michael: And how long were you his
secretary and then did you move up with
the agency?
Jay: I was his secretary for six months
and then he offered me two things. He
said, number one I’ll give you a
business card, an office with a window,
and a promotion to executive secretary.
He says, I’ll double your salary from
$5,200—I was making $100 a week—from
$5,200 a year; I’ll double it to
$10,000. I’ll do that or I’ll get you a
job as a copywriter at an advertising
agency he said because we’re too small
to need more than one writer and I’m it.
You should be a writer. He said so take
your time; double your salary and be my
executive secretary, or have me get you
a job as a copywriter.
Michael: So, what did you do?
Jay: I chose to get a job as a
copywriter. It was with a company called
Richard Meltzer in San Francisco and
from there I went to Play Boy in the
very early days of Play Boy when Hefner
was still walking around in his robe and
drinking Pepsi Cola’s. And I realized he
was not a mentor but I realized from
Hugh Hefner that you don’t have to have
any talents as long as you’re aware of
you limitation. He does not have any
talent in writing, but he surrounded
himself with the best writers and
editors. He had no talent in
photography, so he brought in the best;
purchased their photos from the outside.
Yet didn’t have a clue about art, but he
taste and he knew people who were great
art directors and artists. So, by
surrounding himself with talent, he
built the Play Boy empire. And I
thought, my God the man has no talent
for anything except he knows his
limitations and he does have a vision.
It was creatively frustrating for me, a
creative person, to work at Play Boy
because they had an established identity
and an established voice and I would
have been loony to advise him to change
that identity. I went to work for Leo
Burnett Advertising and Leo Burnett at
the time was the best advertising agency
on the plant. I worked there and I saw
that Leo Burnett became my real mentor.
The things he taught me about
advertising and about writing and about
people and then the need to write in
what he called searchly English, which
is language that anybody can understand.
And he fervidly believed that you should
never work past five o’clock or bring
work home or work on weekends. He felt
that if you couldn’t get your work done
in the normal 9 to 5 hours you ought not
have the job working at his advertising
agency.
Michael: What year did you start with
Leo Burnett? Jay: I started working there in the
early 60’s. I left and went to run the
credit division of their London office
if the late 60’s. And then when I came
back, I was pirated away by J. Walter
Thompson, the largest advertising agency
in the world. And after a few years
there, I wanted to move to a warmer
climate. Chicago was just way too cold
for my ears. So, they wouldn’t transfer
me, so I sought employment in San
Francisco. Got it on my own. But I found
out that when I started working from my
home, I could accomplish in three days
what used to take five days. The reason
is because I was protected from meetings
and from committees and from memos and
from nice people coming to shoot the
breeze.
Michael: Was that a frustration in all
agencies you work?
Jay: It was a leading frustration and
yes, the memos were, too. The nice
people coming in to talk, now that
wasn’t a frustration, but it got in the
way of me completing the assignment I
was working on.
Michael: And your assignments were
specifically copywriting?
Jay: Yes. Copywriting and
conceptualizing what the whole
advertisement would be. So, if it was a
television commercial, I would have to
determine the visuals because television
is a visual medium. Then I’d have to do
the writing that went along with that.
Michael: Was this all done with a group
of people; like around a boardroom
table?
Jay: No, I’ve never been able to work
with other people. This was done by me,
in my office, all alone. And I didn’t
invite anybody in.
Michael: So, you pretty much took the
whole project on yourself?
Jay: Yes. And then I would have 12
projects and I would take on maybe five
and delegate the others seven to people
who worked for me.
Michael: So, when you were with Leo
Burnett, is that where you got your
fundamental training on copywriting?
Jay: Absolutely yes, Michael. Leo
Burnett is the other person who I would
list as a mentor in my life. And there
haven’t been any others. After Howard
Gothage and after Leo Burnett there was
nobody else. Not that I learned all
there was to learn, but because I found
that I just could read a lot. I didn’t
need any other mentor. I had to do a lot
of thinking on my own, figuring things
out on my own because when I worked for
them, I learned how to function in an
advertising agency in a corporate
environment. But working on my own from
my home, I had to make that up as I went
along. There was no precedent. My father
always had a nine to five job and that’s
all I had had. So, I didn’t have any
mentors in the life I’m leading now and
had led since 1971. I never read
anywhere that you could work three days
a week and work from your own home and
sleep late.
Michael: What did your father do?
Jay: He was a sales manager for a
container corporation; a firm in the
mid-west that sells corrugated boxes.
Michael: Did you grow up in Chicago?
Jay: Yes, I sure did.
Michael: How old are you now?
Jay: I was 71 three days ago.
Michael: In what part of Chicago did you
grow up in?
Jay: I went to Hyde Park high school. I
lived in South __ and then I moved up to
the mid-north. I lived right off the
lake; right off Lawrence Avenue on a
street called Castlewood ___.
Michael: My father is from Chicago. He’s
73. He went to Finn high school.
Jay: Why they were an enemy of ours.
They were a class act on the north side.
We tried to be as good as them on the
south side. But unfortunately your
father’s probably a Cub fan and I’m a
die-hard White Sox fan.
Michael: Remember those numbers one
through five: not very, just a little,
somewhat, ordinarily, and very. I’m
going to give you a word. Just give me
the number that would correspond with
it. The first word is calm. How would
you describe yourself using that key
with the word calm?
Jay: I would say (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: The next on is follower?
Jay: I would say a (Circle one 1 2 3 4
5)
Michael: And the next is people person?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: And the next is decisive?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: The next is free, meaning
carefree?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Next is double-checker,
double-checker?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Quick?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Mild?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Earnest?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Rebel?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Thank you. I’ve got one more
question from Peter because it was so
good. If you had to begin all over again
with no money, fame, reputation, or
contacts, what would you do and how
would you go about building a fortune,
as a marketer is today’s day and age?
Jay: In the very beginning I said no at
time I should have said yes.
Michael: Give me an example of one.
Jay: I had four clients and then a fifth
one wanted me to do the marketing for
them and I thought because I’m so busy
with four, I won’t take on the fifth.
So, I said no. Later on when I lost one
of those four clients, I though darn it,
I should have said yes to those people
because I could have always found the
time in my three day week just taking
care of them. And I wouldn’t have a
problem. I wouldn’t be so close to the
edge.
Michael: When you went to work for the
agency and I guess he somehow influenced
you with a three day week or a five day
week or not taking work at home, were
there days where you did work a lot
longer than that in the earlier days?
Jay: No never. I was always able to
finish by five. I never, ever would have
dreamt brining work home. I wanted to be
with my wife and child and I never would
have thought of working weekends. He
didn’t talk about the three-day week or
even put that idea in my mind. All he
put in my mind was the idea of
professionals are able to get their work
in normal business hours and there’s no
need to be a workaholic.
Michael: When you’re on your time off,
do you generate a lot of ideas when
you’re not working and you’re doing
things like hiking and recreational
stuff?
Jay: No I try not to. And they don’t
automatically come. I’m really not
thinking of ideas. Instead I’m trying to
live in the moment and in the here and
in the now and in the environment I am.
It’s hard to have ideas when you’re
making turns on an advanced ski slope or
when you’re climbing up a waterfall.
Michael: I would think so. That’s some
good advice. What things in your
business do you think not be delegated
to others? And this is by David Jennings
of Melbourne, Australia. Jay: David who lives in the city with
the most beautiful buses on planet
earth. That is a question I’ve asked
myself and come up with an answer that
I’ve lived with. And I’m happy he asked
the question. And I’m happy I came up
with these answers. I believe that you
should never do anything that you can’t
delegate. I think you should delegate as
much as possible. However, in my case
and in my business two things I never
delegate are number one the writing and
number two the planning. I want to do
the planning myself. I want to do all
the writing. I just can’t delegate it
because I have a certain voice I trust
and believe in. And in so far as the
vision, I’ll do anything to help achieve
that vision and it’s hard to delegate
your vision. It comes from so deep
within. But, I delegate everything else.
Michael: Give me some examples in your
business today of things you delegate.
What are some examples? Jay: I have a web master who maintains
our website; keeps it fresh. He has an
assistant who does the real ho-hum part
of writing code and keeping the website
up to snuff. We have a person who
delegates everything to do with joint
ventures. People approach us more and
more to do joint ventures with us. And
I’m getting more and more clueless as to
how they work. So, we brought a man on
board who’s an expert on joint ventures.
Michael: How is he paid?
Jay: He gets a percentage of whatever he
brings in by the joint ventures. So,
it’s no loss for us and it causes him to
work harder and smarter because he
cashes in on the eventual payout. I
believe strongly in profit sharing with
anybody. We’ve never had employees until
two months when we hired my daughter.
I’ve never believed in having an
employee. We delegate photography. We
delegate art. We delegate design. I have
a weekly phone call on our guerrilla
marketing association. I delegate that
phone call to somebody else. We’ve put
up daily marketing tips on our website.
Every day a new tip. And I gave a
research man all the books I’ve read and
I said why don’t you pick the tips from
out of these books. So, I’ve delegated
that editing portion, that editing part
to him.
Michael: Now, are you the person dealing
with all these people or do you have
someone else doing that?
Jay: As much as possible I have someone
else doing that to keep me free to do
the writing and the planning.
can only do that back and forth with people in real time.
Michael: Do you record the phone calls?
Jay: We started doing the phone calls in
April of 2003. We have a phone call for
every week from April 2003 until last
night, February 18, 2004. That’s a lot
of phone calls.
Michael: Yes, and they last about an
hour each?
Jay: They’re an hour each. But people
can listen to them and go back and
listen to them over and over and over
again. The calls are exactly one hour.
Michael: What kind of service do you use
to record the calls—a conference calling
service?
Jay: Yes, we use a conference service
out of Atlanta.
Michael: Is it M3?
Jay: It’s MP3, yes.
Michael: What has been your most
successful marketed product and with
that product was there any one way in
which you marketed it that stands out.
That’s from David Jennings, Melbourne,
Australia.
Jay: The second book I wrote was called,
Secrets of Successful Freelancing. I’ll
say it again, Secrets of Successful
Freelancing. It was 43 pages long and
was sold for $10. And I ran ads in the
back of writing magazine and artist
magazine and photographer magazine.
Every time I would spend $100 in ads, I
would get $1,000 in book sales. And so
that really worked. But then, I found
that there was a list of freelancers--a
list of 10,000 of them. So, I wrote a
one-page letter—this was the days before
email—to the 10,000 freelancers in the
United States. And I offered them the
book, a $10 book. I told them if they
buy it and don’t like it, send it back
and I’ll send them their $10 back plus a
dollar just for giving it a shot. What
happened is 33% of the people, 3,330
people ordered the book. And that was an
amazing response rate. So, I thought I
may as well now doing a mailing to a
million freelancers. But, I found out I
had purchased the only list of
freelancers that existed.
Michael: And these were freelance
writers?
Jay: Freelance writers, art directors,
photographers, accountants. So, I just
broadened the idea from the word
freelancers to anybody. I wrote a book
called, Earning Money Without A Job. I
identified about 150 ways that people do
freelance other than the freelancing
methods I just mentioned. That was a
break through success because it was at
a time in the 70’s that people were
beginning to consider the idea of small
business. Big companies were laying off
hundreds of thousands of people at a
time. And here I was telling people how
easy it is to start your own business.
And then of all things, in response to
students because my books led me to
teaching a course at Berkeley, my
students asked me to recommend a book on
marketing for people with big dreams but
limited budget. And I couldn’t find such
a book anywhere. So, I wrote that book
and I called it, Guerrilla Marketing.
That book took on a life of its own. So,
by being responsive to the needs of
society or to the people who were
unemployed and then in response to the
needs of my students. These are the
people with the big dreams but the empty
pockets. By responding to those people,
I had the biggest success I’ve ever had.
It’s just what you said in the
beginning, Michael, I found out what
people needed and then I created a
product for those people. I wasn’t
thinking in terms of making money at
all. I was only thinking in terms of
giving people what they needed. It
wasn’t my opinion of what they needed;
it was what they said they needed.
Michael: What stimulated you to write
the freelancing book? What got that
rolling?
Jay: When I realized that I had been
working a year on my own, from my own
home three days a week, I realized there
was nothing special about anybody being
able to do that. So, I wrote a book
about it. That’s what Secrets Of
Successful Freelancing was. My nephew
said, well, Jay you wrote that as an
instruction manual for yourself. But the
truth is I wrote it about what I was
doing. It was exactly 100% about how I
was able to go on working a three day
week and spending a lot of time with my
wife and daughter and becoming a better
and better skier as the years advanced
because I had so much time on the
slopes. On week days there were no lift
rides. And I think the most successful
thing I ever learned was to be
responsive to people’s needs. And we
started our conversation today by you
telling me that was your opinion. I also
think that it’s not a matter of working
less, but working more effectively. I
don’t think I work any less than other
people. I just don’t waste my time in
meetings or reading memos or having
unnecessary conversations. I work about
as much now as I did when I worked full
time at an advertising agency.
Michael: I’ve got some more descriptive
words. Are you ready?
Jay: I’m ready.
Michael: Number 11 is traditional.
Jay: I would say (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Taste?
Jay: Taste--I would say (Circle one 1 2
3 4 5)
Michael: Self-assured?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Out-going?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Modest?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Passive?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: By the book?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Authoritive?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Contemplative?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: And adaptable?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Great. Here’s a question from
John Eckcroff. What are the two best
books on any topic that you’ve read
recently other than yours?
Jay: Oh, boy. Okay. Al Reis wrote a book
called, Focus. And the book Focus talks
about famous corporations that
everybody’s heard of. And it talks about
the humiliatingly stupid and expensive
mistakes that they’ve made. And anybody
who reads his book will feel a whole lot
better about themselves when they
realize that some of these big companies
really got in trouble because of what’s
called corporate ego and because they
lost their focus, they started
diversifying into areas really beyond
what they ought to be doing. That’s one
of the better books I’ve read on
business in a long time. I’m also
fascinated with book, Fast Food Nation,
which I read last year. Fast Food Nation
was like a tell-all book about fast food
of all kinds in the United States and
the differences between the franchises.
And John asked for two books, I want to
add one more because I’m reading
everything by Jon Krakauer. It’s True
Adventure. After that I read Eiger
Dreams, which is about mountain climbing
stories that he writes about. And then
read Into The Wild, which told about an
ill-fated expedition a man had into
Alaska. Just finished a book called,
Under The Banner of Heaven, which is
sort of a tell-all book about the
Mormons in year 2004. And those are
fascinating books all by Jon Krakauer.
But I would put Focus and Fast Food
Nation as two of the best books I’ve
read in a long, long time.
Michael: Great. Thanks for sharing that.
Here’s a question—I don’t have who it’s
by—but it says you have told thousands
of individual personally and in groups
what to do and how to do your techniques
and the evidence overwhelmingly actually
mind blowing. But your ideas work. How
is it so few people follow through and
apply these insights to fulfill their
ambitions and what in your view are the
different stumbling blocks they create
for themselves?
Jay: Gosh, what brilliant questions. The
people who find stumbling blocks and the
people who don’t consider the ideas I
read about are the people who would give
a five when you would say the word
tradition. They are bound by the
tradition of their parents and their
grandparents, and they think life is
supposed to be a nine to five job. And
they think life characterized by having
too much month left over at the end of
the money and characterized by the
concept of a job they don’t look beyond
that idea, they say if you were to put
ten tunnels down and hide a piece of
cheese at the end of one of the tunnels
and put a mouse at the other end, the
mouse will find the cheese. And if you
move the cheese, the mouse will, again,
find the cheese. They say if you take a
human being and put the human being at
the end of the tunnels and hide a piece
of cheese, the human being will find the
cheese. But if you move the cheese, you
will never again find the cheese. They
keep going down the same tunnel. This is
call unemployment. It’s called unable to
make ends meet. But it’s the tradition
they learned when they were in school.
No one talks about self-improvement when
you’re in grammar school or high school.
And even in college, everything is
oriented to a career and not the idea of
freelancing and being your own person
and running your own company or having
multiple streams of income. So, I think
tradition and family expectations is
what gets in the way of most people.
That’s why they don’t think in terms
being free and working according to the
structures that they set and setting an
income that they want for themselves
rather than what the boss wants. And
giving themselves raises whenever they
feel they deserve it rather than being
at the mercy of somebody else and
working the hours that are comfortable
for them and their body clock rather
than the hours that have traditionally
been in that business or that office or
that factory.
Michael: I see. Do you do it any writing
or work with children to believe in
entrepreneurship or believe in their
ideas? Any projects like that that you
currently do?
Jay: No, only while my daughter was in
school and that was in her grammar
school and her junior high school and
her high school when I talked about the
life of an entrepreneur. I haven’t done
any since then to children. Although
people who don’t know what I’m talking
about and this idea of structuring their
own work existence, they are like
children in my eyes.
Michael: That makes sense. It all comes
to a matter of them believing that it is
really possible. Jay: Yes.
Michael: Here’s a question by Pam
McKinnis from Lagrange, Illinois. She
wants to know how do you get your ideas
on what to research to find the next
topic you will write about?
Jay: God, what great questions. I
subscribe to a lot of Internet
newsletters and marketing newsletters.
And I’m on a lot of mailing lists that
are considered spam. When I get spam,
which everybody gets, I figure that one
out of every 20 will have a good idea in
it. So, the other 19 I can click away
after checking them, but the 20th one
may have a gem in it. And when I go
through newsletter, I just spend maybe
five minutes maximum. But I’m looking
for the titles of something that might
be of intrigue to me and my readers. And
if I’m intrigued by it, then I’m
assuming that my readers, my audience,
will be too. So, by doing a lot of
skimming, a lot of reading of daily
newspaper, by reading some of a national
weekly new magazine on a regular basis,
by watching the news every day and by
subscribing to certain sources of
marketing information, that’s how I’m
able to get new ideas and keep up. Plus
I play poker. On Monday nights, I’ve got
a poker game that’s 18 years old and all
these guys in my game not only do they
want to take my money, but they want to
give me ideas that I can put into my
books because they know I’m a writer.
They know I write columns and have a
newsletter. And they know that I write
books about once a year, so they give me
ideas. Friends of mine in business send
me clipping or send me something or
websites that they thought would be of
interest to me. There are lots of good
ideas out there and I have a lot of help
from a lot of friends who just send me
good ideas.
Michael: Let me ask you this. Let’s say
you come up with a great idea for a
book. Are you working on one right now
that isn’t public yet? Or are you
working on a book currently?
Jay: I have envisioned a new book, but I
haven’t started on it yet. I can’t until
I start doing it.
Michael: Let’s say you have that idea
and you do it and you complete it a
couple of months. What’s your first step
to market that book? What are you going
to do after it’s written and it’s
edited? Do you print them up before you
market it? Tell me a little bit about
the process.
Jay: I email the manuscript to my
publisher. My publisher is in the East
Coast. They take care of producing the
book, getting it into bookstores,
getting it listed with Amazon and
getting it reviewed. Michael: Do you have a contract with
your publisher?
Jay: Yes.
Michael: Can I ask who your publisher
is?
Jay: It’s Oughton Mifflin.
Michael: How long have you been with
them?
Jay: I’ve been with them since 1984.
Michael: Have they done all your books
or just some of them?
Jay: John Wiley has done maybe 40% of my
books. Fifty percent have been done by
Oughton and 10% by Avon or New American
Library.
Michael: So, if you came up with this
new book, are you under contract with
this current publisher or could you
present it to anyone of your previous
publishers?
Jay: My contract says I have to first
sell it to my current publisher. And if
they say no, which they have sometimes,
then I give it to another publisher and
then my current publisher says why were
we so dumb as to say no. Guerrilla
marketing books seem to sell
increasingly with time.
Michael: When you set this deal up,
everyone has dreams of selling a million
books and you’ve sold 16 million. So,
tell someone who maybe doesn’t know
about what this whole situation is like.
Let’s say you land a deal with a
publisher, what kind of offer can you
expect from a publisher and how is it
structured and how do you make money? Is
it something that you can negotiate? Can
you get into some of the details?
Jay: Yes, I sure can. First of all, I
use a literary agent. My agent, who
represents a lot of different authors
and knows a lot of publishers on a first
name basis, he takes 15% of anything
that I get. That means that he then
comes up with how much money I’ll get
because he wants to get the most for me
because he gets 15% of that. And he
knows what my publisher wants at the
time.
Michael: Did you have a literary agent
before you had a publisher?
Jay: No my first book I self-published.
My second and my third book I
self-published and finally one of my
books was reviewed and then the literary
agent called me and said do you have an
agent. And I said what is that? And he
said, well, I will represent you to
publishers and get you more money and
better deals and get you to be a Book of
the Month club selection and get you in
all the big bookstores. So, I said,
okay. And I noticed when I signed a
contract with the publisher; the agent
goes over it first and makes about 16
changes. And they’re all changes in my
favor and I would not have thought to
make those changes if I didn’t have an
agent.
Michael: So, you would advise anyone to
get a good agent?
Jay: Yes, it is definitely worth the 15%
you give them. They then try to get the
most money for your book and they jump
on the publisher to get them to
publicize your book. But the truth is,
publishers, they usually get a little
tour for you go on, so I get to go to
maybe three or four cities and speak at
bookstores and speak to groups of book
sellers. But then you’re kind of on your
own. I give talks. I give talks to
Chambers of Commerce. I give talks to
national conventions and I talk about
guerrilla marketing. I grant interviews
to anybody who wants to talk about
guerrilla marketing. I write columns and
I articles about guerrilla marketing. If
I see that somebody’s copying my ideas
on guerrilla marketing, maybe talks or
teaching courses or writing pamphlets or
articles, instead of suing them, I call
them or email them and I compliment them
on their taste in selecting guerrilla
marketing and I offer them discounts on
books or membership in our association.
And so, I don’t believe in suing because
I know that time spent in court is
deducted from the time you spend in
heaven. So, I spend no time in court. I
never sue anybody. I encourage everybody
who wants to copy me and by doing that
I’ve grown the guerrilla marketing brand
to the point that it’s in 39 languages,
which means, Michael, I don’t understand
38 editions of my own book. But the
world is embracing small business more
than ever before and as a result they
have a need for what I write about. I
just happen to write the right book at
the right time; at the time society was
becoming more enlightened and evolved
and moving out of that job realizing
that it is not as secure as they thought
it was. And they’re opting more for
self-employment—that it is easier than
ever before because of the Internet,
which does make everything a global
market. Last night we made our telephone
call for the association and we had
people on from pretty much around the
world on our phone call because it’s
become truly a global society. And I
find that by speaking, writing; that
will make the book sell. Also, when you
write a book, you’ve got to have in mind
what happens if this book is a success.
And that means what happens is you’ve
got to have another book because people
want something. I’ve always asked that.
I’ve always had that idea. And my agent
has always pushed me in that direction.
He always says, Jay, if this book is
successful, what are you going to write
next? And he causes me to think in that
way. So, as a result, I’ve always had a
next book in mind. I do now. Right now
I’m doing this interactive book, which
we call the Guerrilla Marketing
Association. And I’m finding it’s a very
gratifying way for me and for all
readers to talk to me one-on-one and for
me to talk to them and learn from them.
Learn what they are interested in and
what they care about just as you did
when you sent questionnaires to your
audience, to your people, Michael. Michael: That’s excellent. So, the
publisher is the one who decides what
languages it’s going to be published in?
Jay: Yes.
Michael: And they take care of all that?
Jay: Yes, and the publisher is supposed
to take care of all publicizing of your
book. But everybody who has written a
book knows that that they just don’t
plain do that. That’s why we wrote a
book a couple of years ago called,
Guerrilla Marketing for Writers, which
shows writers who have written a book,
okay, do you want to make your book a
best seller, here’s how to do it.
Michael: Now, let’s go back to the time
you wrote that one-page direct mail
sales letter and sent it out to those
10,000 freelancers. That’s a pretty
incredible response. Now, I don’t know
what you make on each book, but what can
someone expect to make if their agent
negotiates a half decent deal? What do
you make on a book and then when you
look at that with your success as a
copywriter and I’m sure you have a good
understanding of mailing lists. There’s
writers who can sell millions of books
like Agora Publishing and some of the
other big publishing houses. Have you
ever had any desire to do that? Or does
you contract keep you from doing that?
Jay: Well, my contract keeps me from
doing that and my publisher treats me so
well that I like to maintain my loyalty
to them. But a question you’ve brought
up twice and I should have answered the
first time and this is the real honest
to goodness answer. And of all the
things I’m saying during this
conversation, I think this is one of the
most important because it’s so easy to
write a book these days. How much money
did I make from my first book? And the
answer is the publisher gave me an
advance of $10,000. And I would say that
I made about $3 to $5 million from the
book because of the doors that it opened
because of the speaking invitations that
it led to and the offers to write
columns and articles and conduct
seminars and teach courses. It opened so
many doors that I don’t measure the size
of the royalty. That’s minor league by
comparison to the opportunities that
unfold once you have authored a book.
And these days you don’t need an agent;
you don’t need a publisher. Publishing
on demand—just look it up on Google.
Here’s what happened, here’s what it’s
like. A person I know wanted to write a
book for financial planners. He needed
help. He wanted to call it Guerrilla
Marketing for Financial Planners. His
name is Grant Hicks. I said okay. He
wrote the book and he said, Jay, do we
have to take this to your agent? I said,
well, we have to show it to him first;
I’m contractually bound. He has to show
it to my publisher. So, he showed it to
my agent and my agent thought it was too
limited a market, financial advisors. He
showed it to my publisher. My publisher
thought it’s too limited a market--just
financial advisors because my books
generally have a more wide appeal. So,
Grant found out about publishing on
demand. And now—mind you I’m telling you
the truth, this is what goes on now in
2004—he calls a phone number for a
company called Trafford and he says
print one copy of my book and mail it to
such and such an address. Trafford
prints up a copy of the book. It’s
gorgeous. It looks as good as anything
you’d find in Borders or Barnes and
Noble. It’s beautiful color cover,
beautifully produced paper stock,
gorgeously set type and bound. They mail
it to one person. They charge him $10
from publish, print, bind the book and
mail it. He charges $25 for the book.
So, he has zero investment. Trafford is
not like to old days when you’ve got to
print up 5,000 copies. They said, hey,
we’ll do it one at a time.
Michael: Is Trafford one of the biggest
and best?
Jay: They’re the ones that Grant Hicks
found. I don’t know if they’re the
biggest or the best. I’m just giving you
a true story of something that happened
to a friend of mine from Canada, and his
real cost were $10 to print the book and
mail it and $25 is what he charges. He
said also, I could pay the same $10 and
charge $85 for the book. He says but I
try to charge what I think it’s worth
and I think it’s worth $25. So,
technology is such that you can now
print up your books one at a time. You
don’t have to give 10% to an agent. You
don’t have to worry about getting it
into Barnes and Noble or Borders if you
have a mailing list online. But if not
and you want to get it into Barnes and
Noble or Borders, then it’s going to be
a much easier job for you if you do have
a book distributor or a publisher. And
life really becomes easy, if writing is
what you’ve chosen to do, if you do have
a literary agent because there’s lots of
things to do and you want to be freed up
to do only those things you love to do,
speaking and writing.
Michael: I’ve got ten more descriptive
words. Gregarious?
Jay: I would say four (Circle one 1 2 3
4 5)
Michael: Meditative?
Jay: I would say (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Flexible?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Fast paced?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Methodical?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Talkative?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Relaxed?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Agreeable?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Conservative?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Restless?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: That’s great. Another question
from Paul Guthro of Mound, Minnesota.
These days’ consumers are being
bombarded by commercial messages;
they’re everywhere, even in the
restrooms. Consumers can’t escape. What
is the most cost effective way to break
through this clutter and make an impact
on a potential customer?
Jay: Paul, thank you for asking such a
brilliant question. You’re right. We are
being bombarded with more messages now
than at any other time in history and
it’s going to get worse, which is why
Guerrilla Marketing now preaches the
idea of consent marketing and that means
don’t try to make the sale with your
marketing. It’s just too hard these
days. Instead, only try to gain consent
from people to receive more marketing
materials from you. Most people will
withhold their consent. This is a good
thing. Those are good people with means.
You can save your money by not mailing
to those people or not contacting those
people who are not interested in you. A
small percentage will give you their
consent. You can focus your marketing
efforts on broadening their level of
consent. Here’s an example. A woman runs
the most successful summer camp in New
York State. She runs little ads in the
camping directories in back of normal
magazines that have camping directories.
Does she try to sell the camping
experience? No, no, no. All she tries to
do is to get people to send for her
video. She has a booth at the camping
shows that inevitably spring up in the
Northeast about this time of year. And
does she try to sell the camping
experience at her booth at the camping
show? The answer is no, not at all. All
she tries to do is get people to send
for her free video or take her free
video home. When the people take the
video home and they view it, they see
friendly counselors and happy campers.
They see wonderful equipment, beautiful
settings. Does that video attempt to
sell the camping experience? No it
doesn’t. All it tries to do is to get
the people who own the video now to call
for a free in-home appointment.
Eighty-four percent of the people who
make an appointment end up signing their
child up for that summer camp for that
year and probably for the next year and
probably for the year after that—and not
just that kid, but that kid’s brothers
or sisters or classmates or cousins. So,
that woman who practices consent
marketing spends very little, invests
very little in the marketing process.
She breaks through the clutter because
she does not try to make the sale. All
she does is offer something free and
valuable. And then she builds on that
consent. She’s realistic enough to
understand that everyone in the world is
not going to be her market. Her market
is going to be just a small segment of
the universe. But that small segment is
enough for her to have the most
successful summer camp in New York
State. And you can be sure there’s a lot
of competition out there. And many
people these days are no longer aiming
to make the sale, but just to gain
consent. The most practical piece of
advice I can give is the most important
words in the English language these days
are the subject line that you put in
your email. And if you can have a
subject line that gets people to open
the email and if you can have an
enticing couple of paragraphs in your
email that direct people to a website,
most people will not go to that website.
But of the people that are going, they
have given their consent and broadened
it a few time in just a few instances.
First they responded positively to your
subject line and open the email.
Secondly they read the email and they
responded positively by going to the
site. So, the momentum is started with
those people. That’s the way these days
to break through the clutter. Don’t try
to do it all at once. Attempt to do it a
step at a time.
Michael: Great advise. Now, that story
is a blueprint that anyone can take that
idea and model it for their business or
service. Where can someone find a
laundry list of these ideas? Are they on
your site of actual case studies that
your guerrilla students have had
successful ventures with these ideas?
Jay: Our site has a live bulletin board
where people ask questions about what
they should do launching their business.
They ask us to check their website. We
give them opinions. They respond and
maybe tell us how they’re doing. So, we
get to see before our very eyes people
spring from an idea to a success. And
they chronicle that. And, of course, we
have the case history because all the
forum boards since we started are
available for everybody to read. Plus we
have stories, 30 new ones every month
and videos by experts about these small
success stories. A lot of them are
chronicled in my book, Guerilla
Marketing Third Edition. That’s the
biggest seller. A lot of them are in the
new book, Guerrilla Marketing For Free.
But these are stories in which your
people can participate if they join the
Guerrilla Marketing Association. And we
do that because we love see success
unfold before our very eyes without even
having to wait for these case histories
to take place. We see them happening
from week to week right in front of us.
We hear them happening on the phone
every Wednesday evening. And we people’s
fear turn into a bit of information and
that turned into excitement and that
turns into a passion for what they’re
doing. And then we hear the sound of
their voice when they report on the
successes that they had. They also
report on the failures that they had and
we guide them on ways to avoid those
failures. You see a book can’t do that.
But the interactive nature of what it’s
all about—it’s all about nudging people,
and helping them, and being there for
them 24/7. And I mean that—24/7. And I
find when they post a question;
sometimes I think this is a question
that’s over my head. But one of our
coaches answers it and then another
coach amplifies it. Then two more
coaches add something else and the
person, who asked the question has a
treasury of good answers because our
coaches are authors, are professors, or
ex-Fortune 500 Presidents. They’re
entrepreneurs who have succeeded and
they want to share what they’ve done
with the association.
Michael: Let’s talk about your coaches
because there are a lot of people who
promote coaching programs and you end up
getting some high school kid on the
phone who is reading scripts. Can you
tell us the qualifications that you
apply before anyone becomes a coach to
give the public advice on guerrilla
marketing?
Jay: Well, we make all our coaches go
through a rigorous training, Michael
they’ll see we have a very in-place;
serious coaching program that is 12
weeks long and it is very interactive.
It takes place online and by telephone.
And it’s not a matter of all talking and
the coaches listening. It’s a matter of
us talking and the coaches doing. And
they turn in written exercises and they
prove that they have learned each step
along the way during the 12 weeks of
training. And when they have completed
all the course work and those phone
calls, they are ready to coach people.
And a lot of them have turned their
coaching certification certificates into
good business for themselves because no
longer are they just another business
coach. They are a certified guerrilla
marketing coach and people can read what
they’ve been through just by going to MY
site. So, it’s a tough thing. And then
to some people who have taken that
coaching, they want to train with me
one-on-one. In my office here in North
California, we offer master training,
which is five days of training where
they hear all of the details of
guerrilla marketing. But, first we have
to be sure a person is a certified coach
before we do that.
Michael: So, people pay to go through
the coaching program and then once
they’re a certified coach—almost like a
consultant—they can go out and generate
their own business or do you help them
by providing leads from some of the
people inquiring about coaching?
Jay: All of the above, Michael. They’re
on their own to do whatever they want.
If they want leads from us, whether it’s
for clients or speaking, we give them
all the leads they need. We give them
all the opportunities they need.
Michael: Here’s another question from
Tom Cohen from Yorkshire, England. Often
I have ideas and insights that have been
overlooked by big companies. How should
I approach them so that we can both
benefit, them by using the idea and me
getting paid for it? My concern is that
if I present the idea, they can thank me
kindly and say they were working on it
anyway.
Jay: That will probably happen and if
everybody who had a good idea waited to
do it by the numbers, we’d be a very
faltering society. You’re going to have
to realize that almost anybody who sees
your idea will rip you off, but you’ve
got to proceed ahead with it anyhow
because people really aren’t interested
in copying your idea or taking credit
for what you’ve done. You’ve got to just
operate on faith that if the world needs
your idea, they will adopt it. And, yes
it’s true that companies may take it
away from you, but far more companies
are honest and will not take it away
from you. Companies greatest fears these
days are being sued for a new idea that
they’ve inaugurated because they think
they came up with it themselves, but
somebody will say I worked for you 18
years ago and I gave you that idea. And
then they sue the company for $11
million. Companies are terrified of
things like that happening. So, my
advice is don’t worry about it being
stolen. Instead, just try to breath life
into your idea. That’s hard enough thing
on its own. And just don’t worry about
it being stolen or copied.
Michael: Here’s a question from Mark
Ardonnetto, Elk Grove, California. I’m
getting plenty of traffic to my website,
but the conversion is minimal. What must
I do to improve the conversion of visits
to sales?
Jay: Mark, you’ve got to do what the
Internet is best at that means it
enables you to test. You can test
offers. You can test freebies that
you’re giving away. You’ve already
started a test. You know you’re not
converting much. That’s good. That means
you’ve started your test. Now what you
have to do is start tweaking. It’s not
going to be one eureka moment or an
epiphany that’s going to happen.
Instead, you’re going to start making
little tweaks here there. And you’ll
find out that by changing one work or
changing the color of the type or making
it higher on the page or by offering a
free report or having a newsletter or
something you can make little tweaks to,
that will make incremental increases in
your conversion rate. And you should be
constantly testing to see if you’ve
tweaked enough to a point that now you
feel you’re getting a healthy and
responsive rate. It’s all a matter of
testing. And it used to be expensive to
test. Mark, it isn’t expensive anymore.
You know that the cost of changing of
the offer or the text on a page or maybe
the people you’re attracting are wrong
because the equation really is 80% on
the people and 10% on the offer and 10%
on the creative approach that you’re
using. So, you’ve got to be sure your
attracting the right kind of people in
the first place. As Michael said in the
very beginning of this conversation, go
where the needs are and start filling
those needs. Maybe what you’re offering
on your page is not filling needs. Look
at it from the standpoint of not of
yourself, but of the people who visit.
What do they need? Are you offering
that? And if you’re not, then look
again. Try to fulfill a need.
Michael: Great. Thank you. From Fritz
Thorpe, Cincinnati, Ohio. Are postcard
packs a good way to reach the affluent
household? Is there a better way? What
is the future of postcard packs?
Jay: Postcard packs are a wonderful way
to reach affluent people and medium
people. They had very high response
rates in the year 2000; 85% of people
who tried postcard packs repeated. They
repeated it because it worked well for
them. And if you want to get double the
response rate from your postcard pack,
tell the publisher you’d like your
postcard to be put on top of the pack.
And since nobody else asks for that,
you’re going to get a very high response
rate. And then ask the next time, hey,
you put my postcard on top the last
time, the response rate was so good,
please do it again. I think the future
of postcard packs is very bright and
growing especially as the world becomes
tired of getting junk email and
certainly junk faxes. Junk mail is
coming back. Direct mail is going to be
stronger and the strongest form of
direct mail is postcards. And the most
inexpensive way of doing postcard
marketing is postcard packs. They’re a
wonderful way for you to really keep
cost down, reach a targeted market, and
say the right things to the right
people. I can even give you an 800 phone
number for the best postcard pack place
in the United States. From independent
investigation, I hear this is where it’s
happening. This gets you a free brochure
Mark, and you’ll find out what I’m
talking about—(800) 323-2751. That
number is going to work stateside
locations that Michael has mentioned.
So, (800) 323-2751 and then say please
send me your free brochure. And then
you’ll realize that you really can get
high response rate from a postcard in a
postcard pack.
Michael: Here’s another question from
Bob. My question would be for Jay, all
of your years in marketing, what is the
one marketing strategy you used that
paid the greatest dividends?
Jay: I was here when this happened and
this is what I learned that made the
greatest dividend by far. I was working
at an advertising agency in Chicago. We
were called into a cigarette company in
New York. We were called in because they
had a brand that was in 31st place—not a
very good ranking. And it was perceived
as a feminine cigarette. And although it
was true in those days more women smoked
than men, men smoked more cigarettes.
And they wanted to change the perception
of the brand so that it would be
perceived as a more masculine brand. Can
you do that, they asked. We said we’d
give it a shot. So, we went back to
Chicago. We immediately sent a couple of
photographers and an art director to
friend’s ranch in West Texas. And we
told them to spend two weeks shooting
pictures of what goes on in a ranch. We
said shoot pictures of cowboys on a real
ranch. Don’t tell them what you’re
doing. Make these un-posed pictures. We
said don’t have any cows in the
pictures, just men and/or women in the
pictures—just men, horses, and beautiful
scenery. While they did that, we
invented a fictional place. We called it
Marlboro Country. We came up with a
theme line, which was come to where the
flavor is, come to Marlboro Country. And
in those days because it was legal to
hawk cancer on radio and television, we
rented the music to the Magnificent
Seven—$50,000 a year. We presented the
Marlboro campaign to Marlboro brand
group in New York. They loved it. They
agreed to invest $18 million in it the
first year once they saw those pictures
gorgeous photographs of real cowboys and
it said come to where the flavor is,
come to Marlboro Country that really hit
the nail on the head for the Marlboro
brand group. So, the Marlboro was on
radio, television, magazines,
newspapers, billboards all over the
country. And he became a cultural icon
in the course of the year. We went back
to Philip Morris, the parent company of
Marlboro, to get our high-fives and our
compliments and our bonuses. We find out
that this brand that had been the 31st
largest selling cigarette in the country
was now ranked 31. And focus group
interviews in ten cities showed us that
this brand that had been perceived as a
feminine brand was still perceived as a
feminine brand.
Michael: Even with the cowboys?
Jay: Even though we had a year’s worth
of showing these macho cowboys doing
what cowboys really do on a real ranch
in un-posed pictures. So, now we
switched to February of the 2004 and we
see that Marlboro is the number one
selling cigarette in American. It’s
number one to men. It’s number one to
women. It’s the number one selling
cigarette in the world. In fact, one out
of every five cigarettes sold in the
world is a Marlboro. But here’s the
shocker. Absolutely nothing has changed
in the marketing. It’s still cowboys.
It’s still the Marlboro man. It’s still
come to where the flavor is. There’s no
more radio or television. But it’s the
theme of designs and layouts and signs
and billboards, the same models that for
some of those poor guys did die of lung
cancer. So, it shows us what makes
marketing work and what makes marketing
work is amazing. There’s a one-word
answer to the biggest insight I had on
marketing. Anybody who really has made a
fortune in marketing gets this insight
eventually. That one word answer to what
makes marketing work is commitment. And
the heroes of the Marlboro, which is
noted as the best marketed brand in
history are not the guys who came with
words or the idea of being cowboys or
even the people who came up with
visuals. It’s the Chairman of the Board
of Philip Morris who didn’t fire us or
toss it out the window when he invested
$18 million of his dollars and his brand
didn’t budge.
Michael: How long had it been going—for
a year?
Jay: One year and still stayed the 31st.
It took about two years for it to start
moving and it moved skyward, upward ever
since. And when they cut if off radio
and television, it still continued
moving upward because of the commitment
that showed the cowboy to that brand and
I learned, oh my God, it’s not a magic
moment or a magic formula, it’s having
commitment. It’s what makes marriage
work. It’s what makes a business work.
It’s what makes a person run a marathon.
It’s what makes people succeed in
anything. It’s commitment to their
cause. And that’s the insight I learned.
I learned it in a very expensive way.
Most people don’t have $18 million. We
expected it to really be hit over the
head by Joe Coleman, IV, the Chairman of
the Board of Philip Morris. He said,
well, you fellas told me this was going
to take commitment and I’m willing to
hang in there. And Leo Burnett was there
in the room. And Leo Burnett, who
understands a thing or two about
marketing, he expected us to be fired,
as well. But he also had said ahead of
time, this is going to take a while.
People do not want to separate from
their brands in a hurry. People want to
hang on to them. Commitment was insight
I learned.
Michael: Do you remember that day when
you guys were all in there? Who came up
with the idea, talking about it and
putting it together?
Jay: The person’s name was Tom Larkland.
He was from Park Forest, Illinois. He’s
the person who had the idea of cowboys
and the idea of calling it Marlboro
Country. I was the one who had the idea
of using the music from the Magnificent
Seven. Other people--Bob
Eden--contributed to the creative flow
and force of that idea. Notice, Leo
Burnett, whose name is on the door, he
didn’t come up with words, but he
created the atmosphere where we could
come up with something like Marlboro
Country. It was a team effort.
Michael: What a great story. Thank you.
Jay: What a great insight. I taught me
the meaning of commitment loud and
clear, up front and personal, and in
real life.
Michael: Yes. They could have quit too
soon and just around the corner they
would have been there.
Jay: Everybody does, Michael, 90% of
marketing campaigns that fail aren’t
because people had the wrong plan. It’s
because they abandoned it too soon. They
thought it would happen faster than it
really happens. It doesn’t happen in a
hurry.
Michael: We’re talking more image type
advertising. And a lot of the visitors
to my sight are direct marketing savvy.
So, there is a difference. Let’s say you
had that sales letter you wrote for that
first book and you sent it out to 10,000
people. If no one responded, you could
send that thing a third and fourth and
fifth and sixth time for the most part,
no one’s still going to respond. So,
we’re talking about two different types
of advertising?
Jay: Well, you’ve got to know what to
commit to. And you’re right. In direct
marketing, if you don’t get response the
first time, you can’t hang in there.
It’s a different thing. That’s not a
matter of changing somebody’s identity
and happening slowly over time. In
direct marketing, you’re measured by the
minutes. You’re measured by the project.
You’re measured by the mailing. There’s
not room for failure in any of those.
Michael: Well, a lot advertising gets a
lot of flack. They call it image
advertising and it’s talked as wasteful.
I’m sure a lot of it is. What are your
views on that—if someone saw those
Marlboro campaigns at first? It took a
year for the impact to show the results,
but many people today if they saw that
they would think what is this? It’s
image advertising. It’s not direct
responsive in nature. How can someone
differentiate when they’re watching
advertising to know which ones are
image, wasteful and which ones appear to
be like that but could be successful and
big hits.
Jay: It’s really a combination you need,
Michael. You need a combination of some
identity ads telling people who you are
and why you’re good. At the same time,
you’ve got to be making special offers
to them. And if you don’t have that
identity—we don’t use the word image
advertising because an image is a phony
thing defined in the dictionary as a
façade—but identity stems from your true
personality. Every brand, every product,
every service has a personality whether
you know it or not. And if you
communicate the kind of personality you
want people to know about and at the
same time if you’re making special
offers to them, then you’re going to be
doing both things at the same time.
Gaining a share of mind, which should
come before you gain a share of market.
If people get a direct mail letter from
you and they’ve never heard of your
company, they’re going to respond
differently than if they get a direct
mail letter from you but they’ve heard
about your company. They’ve read an ad
or seen a commercial. Now they know more
about you. They may want to learn even
more. You’re going to get a higher
response rate to that offer.
Michael: I’ve got ten more descriptive
words. The ten last ones. Are you ready?
Jay: I’m ready.
Michael: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Jay: I would say somewhat.
Michael: Action oriented?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Take charge?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Yielding?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Hasty?
Jay: I would say four (Circle one 1 2 3
4 5)
Michael: Introspective?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Independent?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Eloquent?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Assertive?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Composed?
Jay: (Circle one 1 2 3 4 5)
Michael: Here’s a question from Gary
Winn from Arlington, Virginia. It’s been
talked that giving something away for
free is good way to generate leads.
Since so many people are giving away
free e-books and products online, it’s
becoming harder and harder to even use
free stuff as a lead generator. How do
you generate leads in spite of this set
back?
Jay: By offering something for free
that’s different from anything else
that’s being offered for free. People
love free things. The problem is with
everybody and their cousin giving away
free things, it’s hard not to duplicate
the offerings of others. So, you have to
have more creativity in what you give
away for free than ever before. And if
you’re creative in what you give away
for free, the concept of free will still
always help you get attention and become
a great lead generator. But more
creativity is demanded than ever before.
One of the ways that creativity is being
demonstrated is giving away free things
that can be photographed. Show a person
a picture of what it is that you’re
offering for free rather than just the
words. Some thing photographed in a way
that looks more enticing. And some very
sophisticated marketing people are now
selecting the freebies that they’re
going to give away based on how
photogenic they are rather than just on
the thing itself. I know a business that
became the second largest fundraising
business in the United States by taking
photographs of $1.19 gifts and putting
them on postcards and then sending them
to powers at major schools and saying we
will give you a free pen clock or a new
quartz calculator if you just respond to
this postcard. And by showing
photographs of the things, the response
rate went way, way up. It’s just a
matter of exercising creativity and
selecting what you’re giving for free
and in presenting it.
Michael: Great. Thank you. Here’s a
question from me. Why the name guerrilla
marketing? Where did the name guerrilla
come from?
Jay: I had written a book, which had 521
ways for people to market in a low cost
method. At the same time, a man was
being interviewed in the San Francisco
Chronicle. He name was Blair Newman. He
was a boyhood friend of Bill Gates. And
Blair said that the economy was so tough
that these days companies are going to
need to use guerrilla marketing. And I
thought that’s a great title for the
book I just wrote. And so I used that
phrase. He called me five years later
and he said are you the guy who wrote
Guerrilla Marketing? And I said yes. He
said who do you give credit for coming
up with that title? I said I give Blair
Newman credit. He said well this is
Blair Newman. I said thank you Blair. I
said I’d never take credit because
you’re the guy who coined the term as
far as I’m concerned. He said, well,
that’s all I cared about. I just wanted
to know if you were taking credit or
giving credit where it’s due.
Michael: That’s great. You played it
straight.
Jay: Yes.
Michael: Here’s a question by Tim Boast
from Sarasota, Florida. It has been
demonstrated again and again that long
copy sells with direct mail and print
advertising. What have you learned about
the transferability of the long copy
concept to the Internet? With the
tendency of the Web to be such a highly
visual medium and with attention spans
increasingly shorter and the tendency to
surf through to other Web location so
compelling, does long copy have a place
on the Web? If so, what’s the best way
to structure and present it in order to
gain maximum effectiveness?
Jay: I have an answer for you Tim. The
idea is take your long copy and first
serve it up as short copy. Make a
concise digest of it as possible. If
that short copy is enticing enough,
it’ll get people to want to read your
long copy. Then your long copy will be
much easier to take if you have a lot of
sub-heads and if you have short
paragraphs. Studies show, and this is
true also of Internet word count that a
long copy message readership falls off
dramatically after 50 words. But between
50 words and 1,000 words there’s hardly
any drop off at all. The people who
don’t care will weed themselves off. The
people who do care will want to learn
everything they can, although you would
think that the tendency is toward
shorter copy. I think the reverse is
true. It’s very short copy emails that
send people to quite long copy websites
where people get to get all the
information they need. The idea is not
to think in terms of long or short copy,
but how much information must I put
forth to let a person make an
intelligent purchase decision. And
sometimes that’s quite a bit of copy.
Never be self-conscience as to how long
your copy is because the people who are
your hottest prospects are praying
you’ll tell them everything. They don’t
want you to hold back and they don’t
want you to fall prey to the idea of
white space or short copy. They want
information. They’re about to spend a
lot of their money and they need
information to avoid making a mistake.
Don’t be self-conscience. Realize that
the people who don’t care will weed
themselves out. The people who do care
love you for everything you’re going to
say.
Michael: Great. Thank you. Here’s from
Henry Schuffler of Washington, D.C. How
do you thing guerrilla marketing
principles change or should be adapted
when applied to Internet marketing? Will
you be writing some form of guerrilla
marketing for the Internet?
Jay: Well, we’ve written three books.
One called, Guerrilla Marketing Online.
Another called, Guerrilla Marketing
Online Second Edition. And another one
called, Guerrilla Marketing Online
Weapons. So, we started writing
guerrilla marketing books and applying
it on the Internet a long time ago. I
wrote Guerrilla Marketing with
Technology. I also talked about how to
behave yourself online. But because
we’re learning so much about online
marketing, we get to put the new things
into our Guerrilla Marketing Insider,
our monthly publication. For example, we
now know the best day of the week to
mail emails for making money. Not for
getting responses or not for getting
people to download your offering, but
for making money. Friday is the best
day. Well, we learned that through a lot
of testing.
Michael: How much better than the other
days?
Jay: It’s maybe 70% better than Tuesday.
While there’s a lot of reasons, but
testing enables people to find that out.
Now if we put that in our books, that
fact may change in a year and the book
will be outdated, but people won’t know
that because books stay on shelves a
long time. That’s why we’re publishing
our things digitally and updating them
monthly because these insights into the
Internet do change on regular basis. And
we’re learning things because a lot of
people are doing testing. And by going
to Jupiter and Forrester sites where
they publish the Internet research
that’s up to the moment, we’re learning
how people are behaving online and how
to get them to respond to you.
Michael: What were those sites you just
mentioned?
Jay: Jupiter
http://www.jup.com ) and
Forrester
http://www.forrester.com Those
are two sites that are very rich with
Internet research information.
Michael: Of consumers and how they’re
behaving?
Jay: Yes. I hope Henry avails himself of
those kinds of marketing insights.
Michael: Could you just repeat the URL
for anyone who wants to go there?
Michael: Here’s another question from
Charles Jenkins. Hello from an American
businessman in Soul, Korea. He attended
one of your weekend seminars in
beautiful Corte Madre several years ago
and then he went to one of your buffet
receptions where he was introduced to
your gracious wife. Along those lines,
is it true that the Got Milk celebrity
mustache commercials cost millions, but
even today produce little increase in
sales and consumption?
Jay: I’ve heard that. I sure don’t have
any hard and fast figures, but I have
heard that. They cost millions to
produce and they didn’t make a big
change and that campaign got a lot of
visibility and a lot of feel good for
milk. But I don’t think it did change
sales because as people are becoming
more nutritionally enlightened, I think
they’re shying away from lactose.
Michael: Here’s a question from Peter
Djordjevic of Middleburg, Virginia. What
is the absolute step one a new business
should take regarding marketing
strategy?
Jay: I think the first step Pete is to
write a seven-sentence guerrilla
marketing plan. I give my students five
minutes to do. The first sentence tells
the purpose of your marketing; what
physical thing do you want people to
do—visit a website, call an 800 number,
look for your product the next time
they’re at the store, answer your email,
clip a coupon. What do you want them to
do physically? The second sentence—all
the sentences are short by the way
except for the fourth. Second sentence
tells the prime benefit or competitive
advantage that you thread in order to
accomplish your purpose. You may have
100 benefits. Pick the main one. You may
have 54 benefits. Pick your competitive
advantage that your competition doesn’t
offer. Thread that. That’s the second
sentence. The third sentence of your
marketing plan lists your target
audience or your target audiences
because most people have multiple target
audiences. The fourth sentence lists the
marketing weapons that you’ll use. There
are 100 different guerrilla marketing
weapons. Sixty-two of them are free.
Michael: And they can see this plan and
do it themselves?
Jay: Not the plan. They can see the list
of 100 marketing weapons, in any of the
guerrilla marketing books, and at my
site they can read the structure for the
guerrilla marketing plan. The fourth
sentence tells the marketing weapons
they’ll use. The fifth sentence tells
their niche in the market place; above
board is positioning—what do they stand
for. What’s the first word they want to
enter people’s minds when the people
hear the name of their company? The
sixth sentence tells their identity, not
their image, but their identity that
which is their company personality. The
seventh sentence tells their marketing
budget, which should be expressed as a
percentage of projected gross sales.
Example, in 2003, the average American
business invested 4% of their revenues
in marketing. And if would have a
seven-sentence marketing plan, it should
only take you five minutes to do those
seven sentences. It forces you to focus
when you put it into seven sentences.
When you put it into seven sentences you
can share it with other people on your
team and they can understand what you’re
getting at without putting them to
sleep. And if you start with that plan
and then commit to that plan, that’s how
the whole thing works. That’s where the
magic comes from, starting with a plan
and then committing to that plan.
Michael: Just do it.
Michael: Tell me about the affect of the
Internet like Barnes and Noble and
Amazon on the sales of your book
compared to distribution through the
traditional bookstores?
Jay: Well, they made sales of my books
go up primarily because of the global
nature of the Internet. When I wrote
Guerrilla Marketing it was in English
and for some reason it went to Japanese
and then it Chinese. And now, as I
mentioned, it’s in 39 languages. That’s
because of the global nature. So, we’re
having more translations and more books
sales. And Amazon is a very easy way for
people to buy a book. I love Borders and
they have almost all the guerrilla
marketing titles all the time, but I
have to wait in line when I buy those.
And it’s just so easy to use
www.barnesandnoble.com or
www.borders.com . I think the ease
in ordering books has caused almost all
author’s book sales to go up. Plus if
you have a dedicated site such as I do,
you could order the books right there.
And I think just by making it easier for
people to find the books and order the
books and pay for the books, everybody’s
book sales go up. And I’m not even
talking about e-books yet.
Michael: Do your books on Amazon and in
the bookstores, aside from there being a
sale, do they sell around the same price
or do some bookstores sell them for more
and some for less? Who determines that?
Jay: It seems the booksellers determine
that themselves. And when all is said
and done and everybody makes their price
cuts, the prices seem to be pretty even
all in all. I can’t say that __ has the
best price or Amazon does because
various booksellers have specials at
certain times.
Michael: Where are most of your sales
coming from; Internet based on your
website or traditional bookstores?
Jay: Traditional bookstores.
Michael: By far?
Jay: No, Amazon sells a lot of guerrilla
marketing books.
Michael: Here’s from Jason. Big business
does a branding and image recognition
marketing. What part does branding play
in guerrilla marketing?
Jay: Right now it is the single most
important thing that we are doing. We
have 31 books. We have about six
co-authors. We have an association, and
we have tapes and we have a lecture
series. We have home study courses. We
have a wonderful event that’s coming up
in San Rafael, California in March. And
we are now taking all those diverse
types of brands and unifying them as a
single brand consciousness and a certain
specific brand look. All of the books
look slightly alike. They have a
camouflage motif, but we’re going to
have more standardization in all of our
guerrilla products and we are uniting
ourselves as a brand. We have been
having meetings these past two weeks
with members of the guerrilla family,
which means co-authors and director of
our joint venture, the people who do the
research for our website. And we’re all
meeting and seeing that we have a very
large brand, easily the best known
marketing brand on planet earth. And
we’re finding ways to make it even
stronger realizing that some of our
people have audio-visual capabilities
and we’ve never been using them. So,
we’re beginning to be more brand
conscience than ever before realizing
that unlike toothpaste where there’s a
lot of them, we are the biggest and
oldest and best known of all the
marketing brands. And we’re going to do
something about that by offering more
services and having more connectedness
between the various branches of the
guerrilla marketing empire. We’re
offering an MBA program, a guerrilla
marketing MBA program through a new
entity called the Guerrilla Business
Academy. So, we are more brand
conscience than ever before and you
ain’t seen nothing yet because a year
from now our brand will have solidified
even more. We will have had our summit
meeting. We will have the input from
fellow guerrilla authors.
Michael: Do you have a licensing
department for your brand?
Jay: Yes we do. We have been very slow
to grant licenses. But we have granted a
few to the right people. They’re having
enormously good results. So are we.
Michael: Here’s a question from Lynn
Fletcher. What’s the best strategy for
promoting referrals from top clients?
Jay: By asking for them and telling them
the truth and letting them know how
important referrals are in your
business. Letting them know we can keep
our prices down if we get referrals from
past customers. Make it easy for them.
Offer to write the referral for them if
they’ll sign it.
Michael: When do you ask—before or
after?
Jay: The moment the sale has been made
is the best time to ask. As soon as the
sale has been consummated and they’ve
paid for it, they feeling a sense of
positivity. And while they’re feeling
that positivity, that’s the time to ask
for the referral. Just ask for the names
of three people or five people who might
benefit from getting on your mailing
list. Don’t just ask for an open-ended
question. Maybe you can give them a
reward or a free gift if they give you
the names of people for referrals. But
the best time to ask a first time is
right after the sale. And then ask a
month later and then ask six months
later.
Michael: You could literally stop
prospecting just based on that one
referral strategy, would you agree?
Jay: That’s exactly right. We have a lot
of clients who now get 85% of their
business just from referrals enabling
them to cut their marketing budgets by
smithereens because we teach them the
important ways to get referrals and how
important that is in your business
venture. We have a process by which
people can automatically get referrals
from now on. That will all be revealed
in the seminar.
Michael: From Ian Pritchard of Great
Britain. Jay, what is the one piece of
advice you would give me to encourage
people to upgrade from what will be a
free membership to a paid membership?
Jay: I think by offering content that is
available nowhere else. I think that
you’re probably not going to get them to
upgrade unless you could offer them
something that’s just not possible to
get except by upgrading with you Ian.
And I think that you’re going to find
it’s not to hard to develop a platinum
version of whatever it is that you are
selling. Give them something that they
can’t get elsewhere that you have never
given before. And it should be something
that has obvious worth and value to
them.
Michael: I’d like to know what drives
you? Also with a book deal, should you
go to a small house or a big house?
Jay: If you’ve got the right book a big
house has more distribution connections.
And they’ll probably have more muscle to
put into the promotion of the book.
However, there are some exceptions to
that. Some small houses like Ten Speed
Press out of Berkeley. They’re not big
compared to Random House, but they
really get behind a book for an author.
And so, I still say that in most cases,
a big house is going to be a better bet
for you, but I’m very strong on
self-publishing these days especially
with the advent of printing on demand.
The first part of the question, could
you repeat that please Michael? Michael: He’d like to know what drives
you, what gives you your drive and
ambition?
Jay: I feel the need. I hear it in the
people’s cries. Small businesses aren’t
making it and I know I have information
that can help them and that drives me
that I can help solve people’s problems.
Michael: What’s the biggest satisfaction
of your career?
Jay: Far and away it’s when a talk and
somebody comes up to me and they say, I
read your book four years ago and I
attended your talk two years ago, but my
business is now 12 times the size it was
before I learned about guerrilla
marketing.
Michael: That’s a good feeling.
Jay: When I hear that, that’s what get
me off.
Michael: Tell me about your student that
you’re most proud of over all the years? Jay: I wrote a book, Earning Money
Without A Job, and a guy called me from
the San Francisco Chronicle.
Michael: How long ago was this?
Jay: This book was in the 70’s. He
interviewed me about the book and I told
him about I work a three day week from
my home and he said I ought to do the
same thing. No, no, no. You have a job
at the Chronicle. You’re a reporter for
the San Francisco Chronicle. You’ve got
a wonderful job. I said, 80% of the
people in America are unhappy with their
job. You have one of the best jobs there
is. He says, no, Jay, I like the idea of
working from home. I like the idea of
working an abbreviated week and most of
all I like the idea of calling your own
shots. He said I’m going to resign from
my job as a reporter at the Chronicle.
He said I’ve read your book and I really
believe in what you’re saying. I said I
think you’re nuts if you quit your job.
But he quit his job and he formed Banana
Republic. So, Mel Zeigler the owner,
founder and creator of Banana Republic
was a reporter for the Chronicle who
interviewed me about Earning Money
Without A Job. And it influenced his
life and it turns out he gave up
something good for something better.
Millions of people are very well and
happily retired because of Mel Zeigler.
Michael: What has being a hugely
successful author done for your life? If
someone was to sell 16 million books, a
book that helps people, what could they
expect in their life?
Jay: It’s a wonderful feeling to know
that you did what you wanted to do and
other people benefited as a result of
it. A lot of people do what they want to
do, but other people aren’t benefiting.
And I just feel really blessed that I’m
able to what I love to do, which is
write, and that a lot of people’s lives
are better because of what I’ve written.
Michael: Here’s a question, I don’t know
who it’s from, several years ago you
wrote an excellent book called, The
90-Minute Hour. In it you wrote of the
value of listening to tapes like those
offered by Michael Senoff at
www.hardtofindseminars.com
while driving and doing other tasks.
What new techno-methods would you
suggest for maximizing the value of time
in today’s world?
Jay: Well, I still think that listening
to tapes is one of the best ways. I
think that engaging in weekly surfing
for one hour on the Internet and seeing
what’s there, you learn how to find
things faster and read through them
faster. I think the quality of search
engines has become so good that it’s
possible now to find better information
faster and easier than ever before. I
think those are technical innovations
that don’t get enough information. Last
week, USA Today ran their cover article
on the growth of Google and they showed
a picture of a Google page and of all
things there was a picture of Guerrilla
Marketing right smack dab in the middle.
Michael: Here’s a gentleman, John Dunn
from Windsor, Connecticut. He’s
launching a live tele-coaching business
to help small business owners increase
their sales and profits. How or what
guerrilla marketing strategies and
tactics would you suggest to acquire
clients?
Jay: I think he should engage in surveys
and ask questions and then get clients
based on the answers that he learns. He
should find out what are the most
important things he offers in the eyes
of his current students or clients or
customers and by finding out from them,
he’ll know what to say to attract more
people just like them. I think the good
ideas come from your current students or
clients or customers. If you find out
what got them excited, that’s how you
find more people just like them and the
same things will excite them.
Michael: What’s you philosophy on money?
Obviously, you’ve made a lot of money
from your books? What was your
philosophy before you had a lot of money
and once you got a lot of money did your
philosophy change?
Jay: I think I spend less time thinking
about money than anybody I’ve met in my
life or anybody who listens to your
words. I’ve never cared about it or
thought about it. I just cared that we
had enough to pay the bills. I’ve never
bought stocks. I’ve never bought bonds.
I don’t believe in that stuff. I don’t
want to spend one second of my life
checking stock tables in the Wall Street
Journal. I know people who have made a
lot of money that way. I have a total
distain for it. All I want is enough to
pay the bills and I don’t care about
growing an empire. I don’t care about
accumulating a lot of money. And I feel
sorry for people who really are
financial advisors and think about
investing other people’s money. I think
that’s a sorry waste of the only life
that you have. And money is necessary,
crucial way of keeping our economy
afloat, but I’m appalled at how many
people’s lives devoted to following
money, trading online, and trying to
grow their financial empires. I think
they’re missing out on so much on the
sweetest things life has to offer. Money
is not one of those things.
Michael: Who do you turn to for advice?
Jay: I would say my poker guys. Michael: Your guy friends? Do you ever
hire copywriters to do writing for any
of your projects?
Jay: No, I do it all myself.
Michael: You do all the writing
yourself?
Jay: I have never hired an outside
writer.
Jay: I appreciate the quality of the
questions from you and from the people
who are fans of yours. This has been
rewarding for me because it was so
stimulating. You’ve got a bright group
of people out there. I’m glad for the
privilege of being able to talk to them.
Michael: Great. Have a great evening. I
will be in touch with you soon.
Jay: Thank you Mike.
Michael: Thanks Jay, Bye.
I want to thank you for listening to
www.hardtofindseminars.com . If you
want to get in touch with any of the
people we interview, please contact
Michael at
www.hardtofindseminars.com
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